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The Garden of Betrayal

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Manhattan, 2002: Mark Wallace has it all—he’s married to Claire, the love of his life; they have two bright, beautiful children, and his is a high-powered Wall Street job. Until one night while on a neighborhood errand by himself, his twelve-year-old son, Kyle, vanishes, brutally snatched off the streets of New York.
Seven years later, Kyle has never been found. The loss, guilt, and mystery surrounding their son’s disappearance have almost destroyed the Wallaces’ marriage, leaving their daughter alienated and distant. Mark has thrown himself into his work—he is now an energy markets consultant for a private hedge fund run by the father of a friend—and, though successful, is living on emotional autopilot.
Now, on the same day that a natural gas pipeline in remote western Russia is blown up by suspected terrorists, a new lead opens in Kyle’s case. When the very next day a colleague slips Mark classified information on Saudi oil production and then suddenly turns up dead, apparently a suicide, it remains for Mark, with the help of his technophile daughter and still-grieving wife, to find the sinister connections among everything that’s going on. Their personal struggle is equally compelling—three people who must once again learn how to be a family.
Politically savvy, emotionally complex, and frighteningly believable, The Garden of Betrayal is a tense and timely imagining of the casualties of recession-era Wall Street gaming and the backroom global oil wars, a riveting, compulsive read that will grip you from first page to last. It also places Lee Vance on the level of today’s best and best-selling thriller writers—Richard North Patterson, Christopher Reich—who not only thrill us but make us think.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 21, 2010
      Vance follows the success of his first book, Restitution, with another engrossing financial thriller built on his 20 years of experience as a trader at Goldman Sachs. One night in 2003, Mark and Claire Wallace's 12-year-old son, Kyle, goes out to rent a movie on Manhattan's Upper West Side and never returns, leaving his family devastated. In the present, Mark's career as an independent energy analyst gets an unexpected boost when he's offered secret research that appears to predict just how much crude the Saudis expect to pump before the depletion of their oil reserves. In the course of authenticating this data, Mark finds himself increasingly entangled in an ever-widening mystery that includes the murders of several of his friends and eventually encompasses the fate of his missing son. Vance is adept at inserting complex information without slowing the pace of the action or disrupting ongoing suspense.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2010
      An advisor to hedge-fund traders learns that the disappearance of his 12-year-old son is linked to international terrorism in this often colorless, disappointing thriller.

      Vance (Restitution, 2007) begins his sophomore effort with a haunting prologue. On a cold afternoon in 2003, three men kidnap Kyle Wallace, a 12-year-old boy. As they pull him off Riverside Drive in Manhattan, the youth's cap goes"tumbling down the mouth of a storm drain…never to be seen again." The opening's swiftly built tension dissipates as Vance jumps ahead seven years, shifting to the first-person narrative of the boy's father, Mark Wallace. Wallace's knowledge of the politics of international-energy supplies has made him a successful Wall Street seer. At the moment he is confronting a series of events that follow in swift succession. First, in the Baltic Sea, terrorists explode a pipeline that was to deliver natural gas from Russia to Germany. Then, Theresa Roxas,"a Latin Audrey Hepburn playing a Wharton business school grad," hands Wallace an iPod loaded with files that reveal the truth about how much oil the Saudis possess (more than they let on). Wallace next meets with a militant U.S. senator, who seems aware of the information Roxas passed on to Wallace, as does hedge-fund player Alex Coleman, a troubled friend of Wallace's, who later dies in a bathtub, suspiciously. As for Wallace's missing son, NYPD detective Reggie Kinnard periodically checks in with new developments in the case and, predictably, Wallace's complex work (often explained in dialogue laden with text book exposition) appears to have played a part in the boy's disappearance. Wallace's wife and daughter, who, like Wallace, remain rather two-dimensional, arrive on the scene to learn what happened to Kyle. The answer comes much sooner than expected, setting the final third of the story adrift.

      Details of international politics and technology overwhelm a potentially gripping family tale.

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2010
      Oil industry analyst Mark Wallace mysteriously winds up with vital pieces of data about the future of energy production. Wallace and his family are still mourning the disappearance of his son Kyle seven years before, and evidence begins mounting that these events are connected. VERDICT The action scenes are brief but compelling, and the financial conspiracy is believable in this second novel by Vance (after "Restitution"). But his real strength is his sympathetic portrayal of a grieving family, and that takes this novel a step beyond ordinary financial thrillers. [See Prepub Alert, "LJ" 3/1/10; 35,000-copy first printing; ebook ISBN 978-0-307-59380-1; also available from Random House Audio.]

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2010
      Seven years after the abduction of their 12-year-old son, the marriage of Mark and Claire Wallace remains deeply strained. But Mark is back at work as an energy-industry analyst, selling his insights into the sleaziest corner of the financial universe to hedge funds and still working with a determined NYPD detective to find the person who abducted Kyle. On the day a new natural-gas pipeline is destroyed in Russia, seemingly by terrorists, a new lead reopens the search for Kyles abductor, creates even deeper fissures in his marriage, and threatens the lives of Mark, Claire, and their now 17-year-old daughter, Kate. To protect them and find Kyles kidnapper, Mark must thwart a labyrinthine plot to create a global energy monopoly. The Garden of Betrayal is a skillfully crafted, highly intelligent, page-turning thriller, even better than Vances fine debut novel, Restitution (2007). Its filled with arresting characters: hedge-fund sharks; a wise, kindly OPEC insider; an overly ambitious senator; his odious fixer; Czech killers; Mossad agents; a dazzling Latina petroleum engineer; and Marks daughter, Kate, whose computer skills help keep her family alive and her parents marriage intact. The tension mounts relentlessly. Every short chapter offers a jolt. Plausible red herrings abound. Alex Drydens Red to Black (2009) also used the same energy-monopoly scenario to fine effect. Vances readers will also wonder if that scenario isnt already underway.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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